User:Amnddrew/sandbox

Mănucă David Andrei, also known as Medás (IPA: /mɪdäs/, Greek: `Mεδάς`, born: 28 Nov. 2008) was a Romanian philosophic author who wrote about various themes such as: spirituality, metaphysics and even sexuality. He started his career since he was twelve, studying many cultures, languages and subjects. By the age of eighteen, he spoke Romanian, English, French, Japanese and could decipher hieroglyphs. His passion for esotericism inspired him to create many poems and texts in which he insisted on the basic principles of New Age. He is best known for his works Kathreftes, Prismah and Atrium.

He identified himself with the term Traveler by which he meant a person who tastes the sweet nectar of life without getting attached to it. As a Sagittarius, he could not perish the lust for wandering out of the line so even if he was baptized, Medás manifested his interest in non-religious cults. He was also a pansexual erotic poet who wrote about homosexual relationships and their issues. Even though he had a hard emotional childhood, Medás kept a neutral aura which made him develop the power of observation and detachment that will prove important in his way to glory.

Resources
Much of Medás` life records can be found in his biography Nostra Historia and some fragments in other books of him.

Name etymology
His name should have been Mănucă David Ștefan from St. Stephen`s celebration day. But being born premature two days before St. Andrew`s celebration he was named so. The Romanian surname Mănucă comes from the phonetic union of the interjection Măi and the word nucă, meaning walnut. David comes from Hebrew and means beloved. This sudden switch between Ștefan (= crowned) and Andrei (=strength) could mean that ''before Medás is crowned he has to find his strength - How? Diving deep inside to access it, just like cracking a walnut (nucă) to get its healthy core''. Medás is an acronym for Mănucă + E (divinity) + David + Andrei + S (organic) = Union of divine and organic (human form) called Mănucă David Andrei.